|
The
men who would be mayor deserve close public scrutiny
By
the time this edition of The Good Life was going to press
February 23, eight men (and no women) had declared their intentions
to compete for the honor of succeeding Gus Garcia as mayor of Austin.
Not all of them had actually filed a formal application for a place
on the general election ballot, but we felt confident enough of
their intentions to spend time interviewing the best and brightest
among them. It's likely that before the filing period closes March
19, others will venture into the arena to offer their services.
If so, we will examine their qualifications and if any latecomers
seem worthy, we will publish their profiles in the April edition.
Under
the City of Austin Charter, to run for office, candidates
shall be eighteen years of age or older on the commencement of their
term, shall have resided within the city for at least six months
and within the State of Texas for at least twelve months, and shall
be a qualified voter of the State of Texas. That's it. Those are
the minimum qualifications. Obviously the city needs someone who
has considerably more than that to offer as mayor, the point person
for city policy and the de facto leader of the Austin City
Council, despite the fact that the mayor has no more voting power
than the six other members of the council. We need to elect someone
who not only envisions what needs to be done but also possesses
the political skill to persuade the other city council members and
garner their support.
These
are tough times. The economy is lagging. Sales taxes are down. And
next year promises to be worse for city revenue because commercial
property values are expected to fall. Austin needs a decisive leader.
Do we have a candidate who can pull us together like Churchill during
the blitz? Who can challenge and inspire us to compete like Kennedy
during the race for outer space? Someone with a cool head and a
clear mind who will stand up not to the ravages of war (though a
war may soon be raging on foreign soil) but a ravaged economy? These
are high standards, indeed, but from among those willing to try
we need to discern who best measures up.
While
anyone who meets the minimum qualifications can get on the ballot,
we are exercising our right under the First Amendment to focus primarily
on those who have something substantial to offer. Which is why we
direct your attention to the four candidates profiled in our cover
story: Marc Katz, Brad Meltzer, Max Nofziger, and Will Wynn.
For
the record, four other people have stated their intention to run
for mayor. These are Leslie Cochran and Jennifer Gale, both of whom
have filed for a place on the ballot; William Dyson, who has appointed
a campaign treasurer; and Dale Reed, who published a campaign ad
in the Valentine's Day edition of The Austin Chronicle.
Both
Cochran and Gale are homeless persons with whom the public is already
well acquainted, as they are perennial candidates who have added
nothing substantive to the public discourse.
Dyson
is a new face in local politics. He is forty years old and says
he was born in Norfolk, Virginia, is the son of an African-American
minister, and has a degree in political science from Norfolk State
University. He has lived in Austin since 1993, he says. After being
laid off for eight months, he says he recently got a job at a software
company in Round Rock, but couldn't provide the company's address.
He says he has never been to a city council meeting or watched one
on television. When interviewed, he exhibited no grasp of local
political issues and was hesitant to provide the names of anyone
who could be asked about his qualifications. Hence, he was not profiled.
Reed,
along with Cochran and Gale, ran against Mayor Kirk Watson when
the incumbent sought reelection in 2000. Watson got 84.03 percent
of the vote, Cochran got 7.77 percent, Reed got 4.69 percent, and
Gale got 3.51 percent. The telephone number Reed provided to the
city clerk's office has been disconnected and he could not be reached
for interview, but we noticed that his campaign ad in the Chronicle
solicits donations in various categories ranging from $100 to $10,000,
despite the fact that donations of more than $100 are prohibited.
Mike Clark-Madison reported in the Chronicle last month that
Reed is a cab driver who in the 2000 election called "for more,
not less, development in western Travis County and for building
a water treatment plant to purify Barton Springs."
Getting
to the meat of the matter, as the field now stands, voters may choose
the next mayor from among four men who will undoubtedly run strong
campaigns. Two of these have council experience (Nofziger, a veteran
of nine years on the council, and Wynn, who is finishing his first
term). The other two, Marc Katz and Brad Meltzer, have strong business
backgrounds and have never before run for office.
That's
the introduction. To get a good sense of the candidates, check out
the profiles, which begin on page sixteen. Their campaign web sites
and campaign office telephone numbers are listed at the bottom of
their profiles, so follow up to learn more.
And
don't forget to vote. The early voting period runs from April 16
to April 29. May 3 is the general election day. You must be registered
to vote at least thirty days before casting your ballot.
Ken
Martin has been covering politics locally since 1981. He wrote the
cover story for Third Coast magazine's March 1983 edition about
Ron Mullen's first campaign for mayor. You may e-mail Ken at editor@goodlifemag.com.
Wynn
poised to jump from council seat to mayor
William
Patrick Wynn was born in Beaumont on September 10, 1961, while just
down the Texas coast Hurricane Carla was battering the shoreline
with winds gusting to one hundred seventy miles per hour. Now Wynn
faces the whirlwind of Austin politics as he seeks to become Austin's
next mayor.
"I
have this significant itch that I want to scratch," says the
Austin City Council member. He holds up a thumb and forefinger separated
by an inch of air, and says, "I happen to think this is going
to be a very defined period of my life. I would be very surprised
if I'm in public office or attempting to be in public office in
my fifties."
Professing
no ambition to rise politically beyond the office of mayor, Wynn
says, "This really does come down to my self-serving goal of
my kids having the option to come back to their hometown as young
adults."
Wynn
felt he didn't have that option in Beaumont, a city of slightly
more than 100,000 people that hasn't grown much, if at all, since
his childhood. Even as a boy he knew he would leave and never come
back to live in what some folks think of as the armpit of Texas.
"It's not a coincidence that my children were born in Austin,"
Wynn says.
Like
all candidates, Wynn faces significant financial obstacles in trying
to get his message to the public. Austin's restrictive campaign-finance
rules-which were approved by seventy-two percent of voters in November
1997, and which narrowly survived repeal by voters in May 2002-limit
a candidate's acceptance of contributions to $100 per donor. That
the contribution limits are overly restrictive is illustrated by
the fact that it would cost about $110,000 to send a single postcard
to each of Austin's 425,000 registered voters, according to Wynn's
figures. Hence Wynn's vocal disdain for the contribution limits,
which he more than once referred to as "anti-democratic"
and "unconstitutional."
"Two
classes of people benefit from the $100 limits," Wynn says,
"incumbents and the people who have access to money, and I
happen to be both." Yet Wynn points out that he led the charge
to get repeal of the donation limits on the ballot. While voters
chose to retain the limits, if elected mayor, Wynn says he will
try again. "Every time there is a charter election, I will
be challenging my colleagues and the citizens to once and for all,
let's correct the problem we have."
"I
spent all day, every day for seven weeks on the phone," Wynn
says of the 2000 council campaign. His effort netted more than seven
hundred contributions totaling $70,000, a fair sum, but still not
enough. Which is why he ponied up more than $90,000 of his own money
in running for the council position he now occupies. (It was only
last year that he finally settled a $91,400 loan outstanding from
that campaign.)
For
the mayoral campaign now underway, Wynn hopes to raise about $175,000.
That's a mere fraction of the $750,000 that Kirk Watson raised for
his 1997 campaign against Council Member Ronney Reynolds, before
donation limits were imposed. Wynn had raised just $8,750 through
the reporting period ending December 31, but he did not formally
kick off the campaign until February 4. For that event, Miguel's
La Bodega downtown was crowded with more than two hundred supporters,
many of whom presented checks.
Wynn
will use part of his campaign budget for consultants David Butts
and Pat Crow, and campaign managers Mark Nathan and Christian Archer.
Nathan and Archer worked in the ill-fated 2002 Texas gubernatorial
campaign of Democrat Tony Sanchez.
While
Wynn seems genuinely outraged by the current campaign finance laws
that govern Austin elections, these rules undeniably give wealthy
individuals like him a big advantage over less affluent candidates.
His wealth allows Wynn to live in a West Austin home valued at more
than $1.3 million, while giving his council duties full-time attention
and earning little or nothing from business endeavors.
"I
like to say that I made my money the old-fashioned way-I married
it," says Wynn. Wife Anne Elizabeth Wynn is the daughter of
Melbern G. and Susanne M. Glasscock, who endowed the Center for
Humanities Research and a number of other academic activities at
Texas A&M University. Her father is president and chief executive
officer of Houston-based Texas Aromatics LP, a firm that markets
byproducts from refineries and petrochemical operations. Anne Elizabeth
Wynn is part owner of that company, says Will Wynn.
To
avoid a conflict of interest while on the city council, within six
months of taking office Wynn had sold his interest in Block 42 Congress
Partners Ltd., the entity under which Wynn and partner Tom Stacy
assembled the land in the 400 block of Congress Avenue, and where
a thirty-three-story office building is now under construction.
That transaction netted Wynn capital gains of $500,000, according
to his financial disclosure statement filed with the city. Wynn
is still involved in two other partnerships, both involving ownership
of buildings in East Sixth Street's entertainment district.
Wynn
left Beaumont at the age of eighteen and never looked back. He lived
with an older brother in northeast Austin and earned a degree in
environmental design from Texas A&M University's College of
Architecture on a work-study program, in which he alternated between
classes in College Station and interning with Austin-based Shefelman
& Nix Architects. While at Shefelman & Nix, located at Eighth
and Congress, he often observed the construction of the twenty-story
office building at Ninth and Congress. As it turned out, a decade
later he would come back as project manager to rehabilitate that
structure's crumbling façade.
In
the interim, he spent three years in Chicago with a commercial real
estate firm, enjoyed a short stint as a graduate student at Harvard
University, and even spent a summer working in Governor Bill Clements'
budget office. In 1988, he moved to Dallas to work for R.D. Stone
Interests (later Faison-Stone Inc.). In 1991, he became project
manager for the renovation of what would become Frost Bank Plaza,
and moved to Austin in 1994. In 1997 he left Faison-Stone to form
his own company, Civitas Investments (civitas being Latin for citizenship),
and restored two historic buildings on East Sixth Street.
While
serving as chair of the Downtown Austin Alliance, Wynn launched
his campaign for Place 5 on the city council, and nudged out four
competitors to win the May 6, 2000, election with 50.53 percent
of the votes, narrowly avoiding a runoff.
Now
a council member for just shy of three years, Wynn has punched practically
every possible ticket en route to the city's top elected post. Much
of his energy goes into finding regional solutions to Austin's problems.
Wynn currently chairs the Greater Austin-San Antonio Corridor Council,
a private, nonprofit corporation that seeks to manage growth from
a regional perspective. Wynn helped to found Envision Central Texas,
a body that seeks to build a public consensus for regional planning
in Central Texas; he now sits on the organization's sixty-six member
executive committee. He is a member of CAMPO's (Capital Area Metropolitan
Planning Organization) Policy Advisory Committee of twenty-one members;
CAMPO coordinates regional transportation planning and approves
the use of federal transportation funds within the Austin metropolitan
area. Wynn also chairs the Coordinating Committee for the Balcones
Canyonlands Conservation Plan, whose mission is to complete and
manage the Balcones Canyonlands Preserve, more than thirty thousand
acres of habitat for endangered species.
A
more recent initiative that Wynn chairs is the Mayor's Task Force
on the Economy, whose recommendations for re-booting business activity
in the wake of the dot-com bust are scheduled to be presented to
the city council this month. For Wynn, the bottom line, is "We
have to make Austin a business-friendly environment. That scares
people, but it shouldn't."
One
way to make the climate for business better is to ease the red tape
that businesses encounter, Wynn says. He ran the city's gauntlet
himself in rehabilitating properties on East Sixth Street. Now he's
involved in helping to facilitate the reopening of The Tavern at
Twelfth and Lamar. Rather than trying to revise the city's massive
development regulations-an effort that foundered under its own weight
the last time around-Wynn says the city staff must change its mind-set.
Mike Heitz, director of the Watershed Protection and Development
Review Department, is personally overseeing The Tavern project to
boil down the complexities to a few manageable variances, Wynn says.
That project could provide a template for other projects to follow
through the regulatory maze.
A
friendly business environment must be balanced with protecting the
natural environment, Wynn says. This would be done by stopping development
where it is inappropriate. He says his message to land developers
in environmentally sensitive areas is, "How can I help you
be successful someplace else?" He wants to continue offering
incentives to build downtown to balance the differential of what
it costs to build elsewhere.
As
a city council member, Wynn has been vocal about cutting expenses
in the face of revenue shortfalls caused by shrinking sales taxes
and declining commercial property values. He cut his council staff
in half (from two positions to one) and tried to stave off an additional
$500,000 allocation for the Austin Music Network. None of the other
council members followed his lead. No one else reduced their staff.
No one else opposed the funding.
While
cutting his staff saved a few bucks it also cut Wynn's responsiveness
to constituents. E-mails have at times stacked up, unanswered, especially
when hot-button issues hit the council agenda, such as the anti-war
resolution the council passed (with Wynn and Betty Dunkerley abstaining).
Those who try to reach his office by telephone are sometimes frustrated
because Wynn's voice-mailbox is full and can't accept a message.
Regarding
the Austin Music Network, Wynn made no effort to visit with other
council members in advance. He instead used the council dais as
a soapbox to argue that with the city facing a $60 million budget
shortfall, it was time to pull the plug. While his cause was just-the
Austin Music Network was supposed to have become self-sufficient
long ago, and despite getting $4 million in city funding over the
years hasn't even come close-his tactics were an abject failure.
"Privately, I believe all my colleagues knew what my position
was going to be. I didn't try to persuade them
My colleagues
had made up their minds long before my argument."
Wynn
points to other instances in which he has exercised what he views
as fiscal prudence, despite lack of support from his colleagues.
He came out on the short end of the vote in March 2001 when the
council voted 5-2 to pay Browning-Ferris Industries (BFI) about
$600,000 for property it had purchased in South Austin for a new
recycling facility. The motion also granted BFI $200,000 in credit
to use the city's recycling center. The council majority's position
was to support neighborhood opposition to that site. Ironically,
BFI had purchased the South Austin site only after the city forced
it to abandon a recycling center in East Austin, and had paid the
company $3.9 million for the East Austin site. Ultimately, BFI wound
up putting its recycling facility in Manor. Wynn says the city still
owns the South Austin site and it's worth about a third of what
the city paid for it. "We need that $800,000 now," Wynn
says.
Wynn
says the city must do more to save funds by cooperating with other
governmental entities, such as it did recently by agreeing to let
Travis County run city elections. If elected mayor, Wynn promises
to reduce the mayoral staff, as he did his council staff.
While
he laments the lost opportunities to save taxpayers money, Wynn
also thinks the council has fallen short in other areas. Noting
that he is including himself in this criticism, Wynn says, "We
all give lip service that we want to fight suburban sprawl, yet
the council is pretty damned consistent at fighting density. Sprawl
has one enemy and one enemy only, and that's density. We say we're
out to fight suburban sprawl yet we tend to fight density even where
in my opinion density is appropriate
I looked it up, density
is a seven-letter word, not a four-letter word."
A
trait that Wynn readily acknowledges is that he sometimes loses
his temper. "I react stronger than the situation calls for
occasionally. I won't try to make excuses for that for anybody,
but I think there's always going to be some of that when you're
out trying to accomplish a lot and you get frustrated, whether it
be with a bureaucracy or a rule or constraint that you think shouldn't
be there."
The
overriding issue in this campaign, Wynn says, is the city's budget
deficit. "We have to work on the budget and that will be painful,"
he says. The budget ax may chop city jobs that are currently occupied.
"It would not surprise me to see true layoffs," Wynn says.
Wynn
and his wife chaired the 2002 fund-raising campaign for Planned
Parenthood, and he supports city funding for women's reproductive
healthcare.
Once
past the budget crisis, Wynn wants to work on long-term goals including
a new downtown library and converting the defunct Seaholm Power
Plant to civic use. He wants to complete a number of transportation
initiatives including a commuter rail district, regional mobility
authority, and construction of State Highway 130 to include rail
freight. To ease traffic congestion and reduce air pollution, Wynn
advocates installing high-occupancy vehicle lanes on both I-35 and
MoPac Expressway and promoting an aggressive campaign to encourage
carpooling.
Wynn,
who endorsed the light-rail proposition that was narrowly defeated
in 2000, says he still supports it, along every other form of mass
transportation possible.
Wynn
says he supports the concept of a hospital district that would make
funding of healthcare more equitable within Travis County. "We
have a very inequitable public healthcare financing system and we've
got to begin to fix it. I think the first rational step is a countywide
system," he says.
Regarding
Mayor Gus Garcia's proposal to stiffen the city's no-smoking rules,
Wynn says he has not seen the details but has two concerns. First,
it would be inequitable to treat bars differently from bars and
grills, he says. "It seems to me that if it's a health issue,
it should be a health issue whether you're a bar or a restaurant."
Secondly, he says, many restaurants have opened recently and followed
the city's existing ordinance, "spending tens of thousands
of dollars" on ventilation systems. "If we change the
ordinance, the recent additional investment would be made worthless.
Fair play tells me that we should have an objective analysis and
discussion about that."
At
root, Council Member Will Wynn is well connected to a number of
heavyweight organizations and wealthy enough to run a strong campaign,
but seems to have more going for him than the typical candidate
from the business sector. He says he moved to Austin permanently
because of singer-songwriter Guy Clark-even claims he knows the
lyrics to all of Clark's songs-and was a "quiet, dues-paying
member" of the Save Our Springs Alliance before joining the
council. We will find out May 3 whether Wynn's healthy dose of self-effacing
Aggie charm laced with a penchant for fiscal discipline will play
well with voters who pick Austin's next mayor.
For
more on Will Wynn, visit www.willwynn.com
or call his campaign office at 512-448-9455.
BACK
TO TOP
Nofziger
confronts ninth gate in eternal quest to become Austin's mayor
Political
warhorse Michael Eddie "Max" Nofziger, a fifty-five-year-old
(this month) former Austin City Council member, has heard the bugler's
call to the starting gate and he is once again charging after the
votes needed to become Austin's mayor. This is Nofziger's ninth
run for a seat on the council dais-and his fourth bid to be mayor-since
he began running for political office in 1979.
In
each of his three previous mayoral campaigns (1983, 1985 and 1997)
Nofziger garnered enough votes to force a runoff between two other
candidates. "This time, of course, the goal is to get in a
runoff, not just create one," he says.
After
finishing far behind Kirk Watson and Ronney Reynolds in the 1997
mayoral election, Nofziger chose not to run for mayor in 2000, when
Kirk Watson was reelected in a landslide against feeble competition,
or in 2001, when former Council Member Gus Garcia won the special
election to succeed Watson. By June when the new mayor is sworn
in, Nofziger will have been out of elective office seven years.
During that time, he made a television commercial for Chevrolet
trucks and helped to find a buyer for the Cinema West porn theater
on South Congress, which led to the building's renovation as an
office building. From April 1998 through December 1999, Nofziger
was employed by the Austin Police Department to help stop prostitution
on South Congress Avenue, earning $20,425 per year in a job funded
by a US Department of Justice grant for community policing.
Despite
his years away from the council dais, Nofziger can claim far more
experience in governing than other candidates in this race; he spent
nine years on the council before stepping down in 1996. Nofziger
says the city's current fiscal crisis and downbeat local economy
are similar to conditions when he first took office in 1987. "I
have the experience to do this. I've done it before," he says.
"I'm willing to offer my knowledge and my experience to the
citizens of Austin and tell them that I'm the best one to help us
get through these difficult times."
Nofziger's
credibility as a political strategist got a boost from his role
in defeating the light-rail initiative in November 2000, a campaign
in which he acted as a consultant to longtime rail foe Gerald Daugherty
and retired high-tech executive Jim Skaggs. Although vastly outspent
by rail advocates, their slogan, "No Rail: Costs Too Much,
Does Too Little," proved unbeatable. The proposition failed
by fewer than two thousand votes out of more than a quarter-million
cast. Daugherty used that victory as a springboard to win the Precinct
3 seat on the Travis County Commissioners Court last November, despite
bad press over numerous tax liens.
Nofziger
continues to consult for those who oppose light rail. His new client
is the Save South Congress Association. The group formed a year
after the light-rail referendum failed, voicing concerns that Capital
Metro has continued planning for a Rapid Transit System that members
view as potentially detrimental.
In
the mayoral campaign, Nofziger knows he will be outspent by several
other candidates and hopes to pull off the same sort of upset that
defeated the light-rail measure. Noting that Council Member Will
Wynn is the most formidable opponent he faces in this campaign,
Nofziger says, "If this race is about who has the most money,
then Will is going to win, no doubt. On the other hand, if it's
about who has the best and most experience, I obviously have the
most experience. So it's going to be a contest as to which criteria
is most pressing for the citizens and voters."
Nofziger
says he hopes to raise between $50,000 and $100,000 for this election,
far less than viable mayoral candidates typically spend. His relatively
cheap campaign may be effective because he's already well known,
eschews spending money on consultants, and runs a mostly do-it-yourself
operation. His campaign manager, Christine Buendel, is a paralegal
who's never before run a campaign, but Nofziger says she's detail-oriented
and organized, which is all he needs.
Nofziger
says his roots run six generations deep in the tiny town of Archbold,
Ohio, a Mennonite community where his ancestors arrived as early
settlers in 1834. But like many a young man who came of age during
the Vietnam War, he had a yen to wander. He moved around the country,
living briefly in Florida, Denver, and Houston. He first hit Austin
when he was hitchhiking through in 1973 and moved here permanently
the next year, supporting himself by peddling flowers at South Congress
and Oltorf.
"I
was looking for my place, and as soon as I got to Austin I knew
this was it
For me it was the music-the first night was unbelievable-and
then we went out on Barton Creek skinny-dipping and Lone Star sipping,
and I recognized immediately, this is paradise
It's
interesting how my first two influences, music and the water, Barton
Creek in particular, have informed my politics over the years and
have been a key part of what I'm trying to do here in Austin, preserve
the water and preserve the music."
By
1979, Nofziger had joined the movement to oppose voter approval
for the South Texas Nuclear Project-a power plant that got built
anyway, suffering enormous cost overruns in the process-and began
campaigning for city council. It would be eight long years and five
tries on the ballot before he finally got elected in 1987, upsetting
business candidate Gilbert Martinez in a runoff. That a flower salesman
could get elected to our governing body is part of Austin's "weird"
past. (Actually for years we had two flower peddlers as perennial
candidates for city council. What differentiated Nofziger from "Crazy"
Carl Hickerson-Bull is that Nofziger had a degree in political science
from Adrian College in Adrian, Michigan, and spoke to the issues.)
As
a council member, Nofziger claims credit for a long list of environmental
accomplishments. Among these are introducing the first nondegradation
water-quality ordinance, backing the defense of the Save Our Springs
Ordinance all the way to the Supreme Court, appointing Earth First!
activist Tim Jones to the city's Environmental Board (he's still
there, by the way), and creating the city staff position of pedestrian
coordinator.
While
hoping that voters will recall his own contributions to environmental
protection, Nofziger says, "A disadvantage that Will has is,
I think, Austinites want an environmentalist to be leading the city
at this time. I think that people realize that after six years of
the 'green' council, our air quality is worse than ever and Barton
Springs is in grave jeopardy."
Nofziger
says, "The council didn't do enough to protect the environment
and Barton Springs, and this latest round of publicity about the
threat to Barton Springs illustrates that." He contends that
the city council made a "huge mistake" in not strengthening
the Save Our Springs Ordinance after the Supreme Court ruled the
city had the right to protect the people's water.
Despite
Nofziger's record on environmental issues, environmental activists
abandoned him in the 1997 campaign in favor of Kirk Watson, a situation
Nofziger attributes to entering the race late. This time, Nofziger
hopes for more loyalty from his former allies, and challenges them
not to be complacent.
"This
election is going to separate the real environmentalists from the
lip-service environmentalists," Nofziger says. "The environmentalists
who have been content to sit back the last six years and watch the
air get dirtier and watch Barton Springs become more and more threatened,
they're going to support Will Wynn. The real environmentalists who
realize that we better do something or it's going to be gone, those
are the ones who are going to support me, because I've done something
Every
big environmental issue over the last twenty-five years, I've been
involved with."
Nofziger
claims to have played a key role in getting voter approval for building
the Austin Convention Center, a move spearheaded by then-mayor Lee
Cooke, and notes that the Convention Center makes money and boosts
the economy. Nofziger wants some of the credit for getting the city's
airport moved to the former Bergstrom Air Force Base. He also notes
that both the convention center and new airport were well managed
projects that came in at or near the approved budget-in contrast
to some of the current city construction projects like the new city
hall, which is neither on time nor on budget.
In
support of the music business, Nofziger says he played a role in
forming the Austin Music Commission, starting the music industry
loan program, and branding Austin as the live music capital of the
world. Had he been on the current council, Nofziger says would have
voted to continue funding for the Austin Music Network, although
he faults the council for awarding contracts to operate the network
without taking bids.
"If
I'm the mayor I will wean the Austin Music Network within three
years," Nofziger says. First, it would be put out for bids,
he said, and then other funding sources would be developed. Noting
that music is a big attraction for Austin's tourism industry, Nofziger
says, "I'm going to make music a priority."
Nofziger says if he was on the current council he would have voted
for the resolution opposing war in Iraq.
Noting
that Council Member Will Wynn cast the only vote to stop funding
the Austin Music Network and abstained from voting on the anti-war
resolution, Nofziger stretches the point, saying, "He's against
music and for war." (For the record, Wynn says he abstained
on the Iraq resolution because it's a matter outside the council's
jurisdiction.) Don't be surprised if you hear Nofziger on the campaign
trail accusing Wynn of wanting to "Make War, Not Music."
Like
Wynn, Nofziger believes that Austin's rules for financing council
and mayoral campaigns are unsatisfactory. Nofziger advocates raising
the $100 contribution limit to $500.
"My
campaign is geared to increase voter turnout," Nofziger says.
He says the meaty issues facing the city ought to generate more
interest, including the cost of living, the city's spending, and
the need to revitalize the economy, protect the environment, improve
transportation, and keep Austin weird.
Nofziger
criticizes the current council for giving the Convention Center
Hotel project $15 million after the project's backers had already
agreed to build it without city assistance.
"Smart
Growth was a disaster," Nofziger says, noting the loss of such
icons as Liberty Lunch, Ruta Maya, Steamboat, and Waterloo Brewery,
not to mention the looming skeleton of the Intel building. If elected,
Nofziger says he will move to stop giving incentives for development.
"My approach will be on small business
the backbone of
the Austin economy."
If
elected, Nofziger says he will seek to sit on Capital Metro's board
of directors, on which two council members now sit. "The twin
issues of transportation and air quality are at such a crisis point
in Austin that it demands the time and attention of the mayor."
He says that Capital Metro's sales tax of one-percent should not
be reduced but the money should not be stockpiled. Instead, it should
be used to improve the mass transit system, reduce traffic congestion
and improve air quality.
Regarding
other transportation issues, Nofziger says that Governor Rick Perry's
strong support of State Highway 130 will move its construction forward.
Nofziger thinks commuter rail makes more sense than light rail.
Nofziger's
own ideas for transportation are in a package called Affordable
Clean Air Transit, improvements that would be cost-effective, minimize
street interruptions for construction, and can happen quickly, he
says. This would involve replacing "Capital Metro's diesel
fleet with smaller, cleaner, quieter buses, some battery powered,
some turbine powered." (Capital Metro is already pilot testing
turbine-powered buses.)
"My
approach to make Austin the center for clean vehicles
is for
Capital Metro to offer a rebate of $5,000 to people who buy one
of those (Toyota) Prius or Honda (Insight) vehicles that get better
mileage. That would be a substantial enough amount of money to spark
some interest
We should introduce to Austin clean vehicles
and educate our populace that you can have a clean vehicle-you're
not limited to these gas-guzzling, exhaust-belching polluters."
Nofziger says he drives a small Chevrolet pickup truck.
On
the subject of regional planning, Nofziger says, "We need to
talk to our neighbors, obviously, and pursue a hospital district."
But he is wary of Envision Central Texas, a regional planning organization
that Will Wynn helped to form. "Envision Central Texas is basically
Phase One of the next light-rail campaign
I'm sure the result
is going to be, 'we need to build light rail.'" Nofziger says
as mayor he wants to be part of the regional planning effort that
Council Member Daryl Slusher has initiated with Hays County, which
could lead to a blueprint on how to develop the Barton Creek watershed.
Nofziger
plays up the fact he has lived in South Austin for nearly thirty
years. "In trying to keep Austin, Austin, and recognizing that
the true Austin is slipping away, we need a true Austin mayor. I
embody that. What's more 'Austin' than having a former flower seller
who is a musician be the mayor of the Live Music Capital of the
World, who also happens to have the most experience? That's what
keeps Austin weird-the weirdest guy has the most experience."
Regarding
Mayor Gus Garcia's intention to further restrict smoking in public
places, Nofziger says that while he does not smoke, "That's
not something I'm really going to push
I think the current
situation is pretty good."
To
address the revenue shortfall in the city budget, Nofziger says,
"There's no escaping layoffs this time around. The city hired
a lot of people the last several years, during the boom, and the
city pegged its spending and hiring to the boom economy. And of
course we have to adjust back as we're in a bust now. We have to
lay people off and there's a substantial savings in that. And we
have to stop hiring all these consultants
We're going to have
to get down to all the things we did in 1987 and 1988, which is
(to cut) travel, magazine subscriptions, all those things. It's
going to be a real belt-tightening time."
Because
the city has incurred so much debt, Nofziger says it may not be
possible to balance the budget without a tax increase, but that's
something he would study after taking office. If elected mayor,
Nofziger says, "I am going to take a voluntary pay cut and
reduce the mayor's staff."
On
the subject of funding for women's reproductive healthcare, Nofziger
says he does not foresee reductions, "but we'll look at all
the funding that we do. We won't start with a zero-based budget
like the state is doing, but we've got to look at every place we
can save some money."
Nofziger
thinks that the financial problems caused by the city paying for
healthcare of people from surrounding counties is an issue that
the federal government should help with. The city should continue
to work with the Legislature to create a hospital district as well.
"We have to have a regional approach to healthcare."
In
this election, we can count on Max Nofziger, who still sports the
trademark "Buffalo Bill" facial hair that makes him instantly
recognizable, to offer us a blast from the past about why he's the
best person for the job.
For
more on Max Nofziger, see www.maxformayor.org
or call his campaign office at 512-474-1029.
BACK
TO TOP
I
gotta tell ya, Marc Katz wants to be Austin's mayor
The
man who carved a good life out of pastrami now wants to get a new
life-as Austin's top elected official.
While
Marc Katz's unmistakable New York accent will be with him always,
he has been an Austin resident for more than a quarter-century.
He was born in Far Rockaway in the borough of Queens, and graduated
from Manhattan's rigorous Stuyvesant High School. His formal education
ended when he dropped out of the University of Oklahoma. Back in
New York, Katz grew unhappy with the expensive, crime-ridden city
that had a sub-par educational system and incredibly high taxes.
He says the crowning blow came when the New York Daily News
headline blared, "New York Drop Dead," which had been
President Gerald Ford's initial answer to the Big Apple's request
for a financial bailout. After the city itself raised taxes and
cut spending, Ford relented, signing legislation extending $2.3
billion in short-term loans, enabling the city to avoid default.
Katz nevertheless decided that Austin would be a far better place
to raise his two children, daughter Andrea born 1969, and son Barry
born 1971. He sold his eatery, Meyer's Restaurant in Jackson Heights,
and moved here in 1977. He was thirty years old.
Having
been in the restaurant business all his life-indeed he was the fourth
generation in a family of kosher butchers and deli owners-Katz nevertheless
tried a new career in Austin, selling Ford automobiles for Bill
McMorris. But when the restaurant property just down the street
from the car dealership became available, he pounced on it, and
In 1979 opened Katz's Deli and Bar. Since then he's made a name
for himself running the place and advertising "Katz's never
kloses." In time, he would add a nightclub upstairs and buy
a couple of properties adjacent to the Sixth Street eatery. Together
these three properties are now on the tax rolls for $2.3 million.
Katz also has an ad agency, Synergy Associates, that handles advertising
for the deli, other restaurants and a few other clients. His son
Barry cloned the deli with a second restaurant in Houston.
The
family's business squabbles made newspaper headlines in late 2001,
when Marc Katz sued, alleging his son was siphoning money out of
the Austin eatery for the Houston operation. The legal wrangling
ended last summer, leaving Barry with full ownership of the Houston
operation and Marc likewise in possession of the Austin original,
which he says today is grossing more than $4 million annually.
It
was during this father-son dustup that Marc Katz's former narcotics
addiction came to light. Not that it was exactly a secret. Katz
had already made a full confession, so to speak, on national television.
In 1999 he was profiled on the PBS program Small Business School.
In that interview, Katz said, "I was in rehabilitation for
fourteen straight months, and it took every minute of it. And I
think my life is going to be spent in rehabilitation now."
Katz says he completed rehabilitation programs in Maryland and Florida
about a decade ago.
His
"dark past" made running for public office a hard sell
for Melanie, his fourth wife, Katz says. He claims that kind of
past is shared by many others who are prominent in the community.
"I am surrounded with people you know very, very well, you
will recognize very, very well, who are also in recovery."
He says these supporters gave him the courage and the insight to
admit his defect. "I have a tremendous opportunity here to
set an example."
One
thing going for Katz in the mayoral contest is huge name recognition
reaped from decades of heavy advertising, for which he says he spends
about seven percent of gross revenue. Hence his claim that polls
in recent years show he has "the most recognizable voice and
face in Austin." That presents a challenge in its own right.
"People say to me, 'Are you really going to do this?' That's
what we have to overcome
I'm really doing this not as a restaurant
owner, I'm doing this as a citizen of Austin
I'm identified
strongly with the restaurant, as it should be. However as mayor,
I'm not the pastrami king."
Katz
says he has built a brand that people recognize and he believes
that the City of Austin has done the same, but the city's image
has lost some of its luster.
"Since
the high-tech bust, the Austin brand is hurting," he says.
"We need to raise the bar on the Austin brand. The people that
live here need to have a better city to live in, so other people
want to live here-that's controlled growth-not incentives
to corporations to move here. If your product is good enough, you
don't have to give incentives."
Carrying
the analogy between running a deli and running a city a step further,
Katz says, "It's simple enough to know what makes the product
good enough; ask the taxpayer what do they want, rather than telling
them what's good for them. I don't think the City of Austin has
it's ear to the people."
Katz
says the city is in financial trouble and he can help. "The
way business handles debt and the way politicians handle debt are
two different ways
We cut costs. We have urgency. The buck
stops at us." With the city, he says, "I believe the buck
stops at the taxpayer," thumping the table with a finger. "I
don't think the taxpayer, the citizen of Austin, is being represented
properly from a financial standpoint."
He
claims he's never laid off an employee due to hard times, and he
doesn't think that the city needs to, either, despite the budget
crunch. But vacancies should not be filled and attrition should
be used to trim expenses.
"Really
the only thing we have to do right now is address the financial
position of the city. We can't afford the luxury of entertaining
performing arts centers that say they're going to come up with the
money after we gave them the land, and then come up short and ask
for bond money from elsewhere. We can't afford consultants to tell
us whether or not streets need to be two-ways...Although probably
one of the three top issues we have is transportation and traffic,
there's nothing we can do about it right now anyway, until we get
our money settled.
"We
need to be pulling back and addressing the debt
If I had (the
city's) debt ratio, I'd be getting a letter from Visa that said,
'Don't leave home with it.'"
For
Katz it's a matter of priorities.
"We
are addressing things that don't matter, and it's ironic to me that
the city council has a stance on Iraq, while there's potholes. And
as (Statesman columnist John) Kelso said the other day, we
broke the Guinness Book of Records for red cones on Barton
Springs Road, not only the number but the length of time that they've
been up. I don't feel like I'm qualified or that I'm talking to
the people of Austin about (Secretary of State) Colin Powell's job.
I'm talking about running the city
Our problem as a municipality
is not Iraq."
While
acknowledging that the possible war with Iraq is hampering the local
economy, Katz says, "We need to face our very specific, solvable
problems and do nothing else. It's going to be painful. We have
to be dogmatic. And we have to use a tremendous amount of expertise
that's available to us."
Underlining
his intent to actually run for the mayor's job-and not just treat
the race as a way to further boost his restaurant's visibility-Katz
has hired veteran political consultant Peck Young of Emory Young
& Associates. While the firm has in recent years focused on
helping candidates elsewhere, it played a key role in local elections
for many years. Katz's campaign manager is James Cardona.
Claiming
to have no original thoughts of his own, Katz says he would do for
Austin what former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani did for Katz's old home
town. "He made New York an attractive place to be. He dressed
it up. He raised the brand." Katz says Giuliani created a strong,
positive environment. "Right now, that's the job that Austin
needs, and I have the roadmap from Mayor Giuliani."
Katz
was not familiar with the Austin Fair Campaign Ordinance, which
sets limits on contributions and expenditures for candidates who
voluntarily abide by it, and would be deciding whether to comply.
He said the decision would be based on how much money it will take
to win the election and how his personal funds may be used to achieve
that. He says he plans to run campaign ads on television.
Asked
what issues he will stress in this campaign, Katz says, "We
need to make Austin a better place to live, to make Austin viable,
to make Austin grow, to make Austin progressive. We need to cut
what Austin does to the essentials." While he thinks that police,
firefighters and EMS are already performing at a "very high
level," he wants to raise performance higher still.
"What
does it take to make a better police department? I think the police
know that. I need to talk to the police
I need to talk to the
top brass. I need to talk to the guys on the street. I need to talk
to the firefighters
I do know a better job could be done if
those departments were given more of a say in how to run this thing.
I'm not a cop. Neither was Giuliani, and he created the greatest
police force New York's ever seen."
Katz
is on record opposing Mayor Gus Garcia's proposed ordinance to further
restrict smoking in public places. "I don't smoke," Katz
says. But in his own restaurant, he allows smoking when the law
allows it, and has separate ventilation systems as required. "It's
really a much bigger issue to me than the smoking
The city
does not need to get into supply-and-demand in a business. We need
to set up a business environment that makes it attractive to do
business
The market will bear what the people want."
Katz
agrees with the Tobacco-Free Austin Coalition, made up of organizations
concerned with health matters, that second-hand smoke is harmful,
but adds, "My job is not surgeon general of Austin
I have
the right to run my business. You have the right to come in or not
come in."
He
says he operates Katz's Deli however need be to attract the most
customers. "I have my life tied up on Sixth and Rio Grande,"
he says, "the city council does not." Katz says he employs
one hundred twenty people in good times and eighty in bad times,
using attrition to shrink the numbers when necessary. Small businesses,
collectively, are the city's largest employer, he says. "We
don't get tax incentives. We don't want tax incentives. We want
an environment where we can do business
The more money I take
in, the more people I employ, the more taxes I pay, the better off
the city is."
Despite
the city's reported $60 million budget shortfall, Katz says, "I
don't think we need city layoffs." He says that a temporary
freeze on hiring should suffice if the business environment is enhanced.
"For
example, we're the 'live music capital of the world,' and now we
have a sound ordinance about the amount of noise that can come out
of a club. If you have a music district, you need to play music
If
someone moves in downtown next to a nightclub, that's what they're
going to expect."
Katz
praises the city's building inspectors, yet calls the regulatory
system a disaster. "It is so counterproductive that it hinders
growth." His argument is not with the inspectors but with a
code that he feels is overly restrictive, beyond what's needed for
public safety.
"I
think keeping Austin weird is great," Katz says. "I think
legislating to keep Austin weird is a contradiction in terms."
He says the way to do it is to strengthen existing businesses, not
legislate to keep other businesses out.
"I
could take the Austin Music Network off the air tomorrow, and the
only people who would be affected are the talented people who work
there," Katz says. "The city keeps coming up with more
and more money and throwing it into a well that has nothing to do
with being the live music capital of the world." Katz says
this is symptomatic of what's wrong. "Austin Music Network
is a great luxury for Austin-not now. The council did nothing that
I know of to promote Austin City Limits and it's an international
brand."
Will
a tax increase be necessary to balance the budget? No, says Katz.
"I think we would be chasing more and more people out of Austin
and hurting the economy for the people who stayed in."
Katz
voices perhaps the bluntest idea any politician has ever espoused
to address traffic congestion: "Nothing. Nothing. The problem
is so huge and so pressing and we don't have a solution
Just
to do something for the sake of doing it is not the answer,"
he says, thumping the table again. "What's needed is a comprehensive
plan," he says, "and on top of that, even if we had a
solution today, we don't have the money."
Carpooling
should be increased, Katz says. "(The) one man, one horse day
has got to end." Mass transportation is the solution to clean
air in the long run, he says, and that should involve getting more
people to ride the buses.
Katz
says the city shouldn't have paid $15 million to help build the
Convention Center Hotel when it was not part of the original agreement.
"A deal is a deal is a deal," he says.
Katz
opposes cutting Capital Metro's sales taxes, but he says the agency
should be run in a more businesslike manner. He said he was glad
that light rail failed in the November 2000 referendum and conditions
are not right to go forward with the project now.
The
mayoral candidate says he has been to council meetings "embarrassingly
infrequently; maybe I've been to five." One that he recalls
was a zoning case many years ago involving land he owned in South
Austin. Nor does he watch council meetings on television. "They're
too long and they're frustrating," he says. So why would he
want to preside over that? "I see a lot on the agenda that's
unnecessary," he says. Pounding the table lightly, Katz says,
"I think meetings like that need to be sharp and to the point."
He would eliminate "fanfare" such as music and proclamations.
"We would just sit down and meet
If a council member wants
to give someone recognition, he should do it on the council member's
time, not on council meeting time
I would cut the agenda and
limit the amount of time we talk on each issue."
Public
forums where anybody and everybody is allowed to speak, Katz says,
should not be held at council meetings. Instead a city council member
or two can hold separate meetings on the issues and then brief fellow
council members. "We've put together council meetings and town
meetings under one roof. It makes (meetings) so long it's counterproductive."
Regarding
protection of water quality, Katz says, "There may be issues
as important, but I don't know that there's anything more important."
He
was not familiar with Smart Growth incentives the city has used
to promote certain types of development. "I don't know enough
about it" he says, "but the general concept is not one
which is attractive to me. If this is smart growth-what we've experienced
in Austin the last few years-I need another label, 'cause I'm unimpressed
with how smart we're looking right now. I see half-finished buildings.
I see farm land on Sixth and Lamar."
Katz
says municipal government overreaches. "I maintain as a general
rule if you create the right environment-that's smart growth. People
will want to be here. When we're 'buying' people to be here, that's
a whole 'nother deal
If I make a better city for the people
living here now
other people will come and go, 'God, I want
to live here,' and that will be growth."
He
opposes incentives for development in general and particularly for
development at Sixth and Lamar that might hurt existing businesses.
But he adds that the city should not legislate against any particular
business locating there. "The free market must prevail,"
he says. "We are in a capitalistic system."
Regarding
women's reproductive healthcare at Brackenridge Hospital, Katz says,
"I don't have enough information." Nor does he know whether
city funding for such healthcare might need to be reduced due to
the city's financial crunch.
In
view of his past problems, is Katz up to the pressure that an Austin
mayor faces? "I can't imagine anybody being more capable to
stand up to economic and political pressure. I've been trained for
this my entire life. The restaurant industry is closer to WW II
on a daily basis than anything else
I don't see the city's
problems that different than any businesses' problems."
"Whoever
is elected mayor on May 3," Katz adds, "the primary goal
needs to be 'Austin never forecloses'-and we're close."
For
more on Marc Katz, visit www.marckatz.com
or call his campaign office at 512-797-9781.
BACK
TO TOP
Brad
Meltzer touts experience in business as asset in mayor's job
Brad
Meltzer wants to be your next mayor, but don't confuse this Brad
Meltzer with the best-selling young novelist of the same name.
Bradley
Charles Meltzer says he was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, and
graduated from nearby Needham High School before earning a bachelor's
degree in accounting from Bentley College in Waltham, Massachusetts.
Citing Austin's quality of life as the main attraction, Meltzer
says he left a management position with theatres and an ad agency
in Boston and moved to Austin in 1987. From 1987 to 1992 he was
executive vice president of Lexus Laboratories in Austin, a company
that produced generic birth-control pills and a number of other
pharmaceuticals. Today he owns and manages fifteen northeast Austin
apartment complexes totaling more than six hundred fifty units,
which he collectively calls Westheimer Apartments, plus Benihana
Restaurant franchises in both Austin and San Antonio.
Although
the forty-eight-year-old Meltzer has never before run for public
office, he is serious about this campaign. That's signified in part
by the fact that he has established a campaign budget estimated
at $150,000, he is willing to spend his own money in the campaign,
and he has hired Ron Dusek, who for thirteen years was a spokesman
for attorneys general of Texas, most recently for Democrat Dan Morales.
The campaign manager is Carlos Espinoza. Meltzer's daughter Lauren,
twenty-two, and son David, eighteen, are both active in the campaign.
Meltzer
was the first candidate to launch television commercials in this
campaign. He has been running spots several times a day on KTBC
Fox 7 since mid-February. But don't expect to see him attacking
his opponents.
"I'm
sick and tired of seeing all this negative campaigning and how people
are trying to destroy other people's reputation," he tells
The Good Life. "I think it's about time that we stopped,
and I want to take a leadership role in that. I want to stop this
negative campaigning and people-bashing
I want to show the
nation that we don't have to be bashing this candidate
and
looking for their Achilles' heel, hurting them, hurting their families,
hurting their friends."
No
council-meeting junkie, Meltzer estimates that he has attended perhaps
fifteen city council meetings in as many years, drawn by issues
such as education and affordable housing.
In
explaining why he thinks he's best qualified to lead city government,
Meltzer touts his diversified business experience and says the mayor's
job is analogous to the chief executive officer of a business.
"What
I can offer is to take the lead as a successful businessman in very
difficult businesses
I know how to put a budget together. I
know how to negotiate. I know how to lead. And we're now in a very
tough fiscal time and I feel that with those kind of qualities I
can do a success for the City of Austin."
The
city's financial crunch is Meltzer's foremost concern.
"My
message is we've been taxed and taxed and taxed. I've never seen
it since 1987 go down
What I've heard is that we've got an
$80 million shortfall as far as taxes are concerned, so some difficult
decisions are going to be made, and
I'd like to bring forth
my leadership to take care of it."
As
an example of his leadership skills, Meltzer claims he was the first
person to develop a direct-to-consumer marketing plan for a prescription
drug (a generic birth-control pill, N.E.E. 1/35). With no previous
experience in the pharmaceutical industry, he says, he won approval
for the plan from the US Food and Drug Administration and convinced
the American Medical Association. He says the program established
a new paradigm for directly educating consumers, instead of the
marketing drugs through doctors and pharmacists. Meltzer says his
experience in marketing would work to the city's advantage.
"The
City of Austin is the best place to live in the United States,"
Meltzer says, "and part of my campaign is to market the city
more, to give more budget to the Austin Convention and Visitors
Bureau." As a private citizen, Meltzer says he has participated
in a panel discussion with the Bureau regarding the Greater Austin
Tourist and Entertainment Guide, a magazine that Meltzer supports
by purchasing paid advertising for his Benihana Restaurant.
Meltzer
is a member of the Mayor's Affordable Housing Committee established
after Gus Garcia was elected mayor. The group is chaired by Mayor
Pro Tem Jackie Goodman, and operates less formally than the city's
boards and commissions. Meltzer defines affordable housing as a
good, safe place for low-income people to live. To increase availability,
Meltzer says he wants the city to provide affordable loans to support
profit-making companies that provide affordable housing, so they
can keep their properties in good shape. The overriding goal is
for low-income people to be able to afford to stay in Austin and
not move outside the city. At present, Meltzer says, "We have
plenty of affordable housing as far as apartments are concerned,
because we have overbuilt."
Two
of Meltzer's own apartment complexes, totaling one hundred sixty
units, were rehabilitated with money from a city loan. He says he
borrowed $500,000 in 1991 on a fifteen-year note and repaid it in
only five years, a claim substantiated by Paul Hilgers, the city's
Community Development Officer.
Meltzer
opposes any change to the city's no-smoking ordinance. "I'm
opposed to it because I want Austin to be a successful city for
business. What this ordinance is trying to do is control and inhibit
its businesses
I don't think we need to burden the consumer.
I don't think we need to burden the businessman by hurting him,
because of the fact he can't have in his bar someone who wants to
smoke and drink." Meltzer says his own restaurants in Austin
and San Antonio are non-smoking facilities, but adds, "I want
as an entrepreneur to be able to make the decision, not as the mayor
to make that decision." He says if the people of Austin want
smoking to be further restricted, then citizens should be bring
a petition to be put on the ballot; it should not be put on the
ballot by the city council.
In
a similar vein, Meltzer says, "If we show people outside the
community that the City of Austin is very business-friendly, I think
that would attract other businesses to come into Austin to fill
up this gap of all these empty apartments, empty office buildings,
empty industrial buildings, and increase our tax base."
As
a current member of the Lieutenant Governor's Business Advisory
Board, Meltzer says he will learn from the state's recent initiative
with zero-based budgeting, and use that knowledge to improve the
city's budgeting methods.
A
photograph of Meltzer and his campaign treasurer, Frank Ivy Jr.,
appeared in the Austin American-Statesman's coverage of Governor
Rick Perry's inaugural ball. Both men were courting support among
the revelers by wearing "Meltzer for Mayor" buttons. It
was no accident that Meltzer was celebrating the Republican Party's
second straight sweep for statewide offices, as he has been a steady
contributor to GOP causes. According to the Center for Responsive
Politics, between August 1999 and February 2003, Meltzer donated
more than $8,000 to the National Republican Congressional Committee,
a figure that Meltzer confirms.
Meltzer
says he is also on the Citizens Task Force of US House Speaker J.
Dennis Hastert, R-Illinois, which advises the speaker on entrepreneurial
and tax issues. He says he received the National Leadership Award
last October from the Republican National Committee for suggestions
he has made on a wide range of tax issues, and for traveling to
Washington to participate in meetings several times a year since
1998.
On
the local political scene, Meltzer says he has contributed to Mayor
Gus Garcia and Council Members Betty Dunkerley and Raul Alvarez.
"I believe in the political processes and I believe that (candidates)
need to be funded," he says.
Meltzer
opposes a tax increase to balance the city's budget. "I believe
that we should not be able to tax the citizens, particularly when
we're in a recession. When everyone is tightening their belts, the
city should be tightening its belt. I think we need to start off
with no new taxes and see where we go from there." Asked if
jobs might be cut from the budget, not just vacant positions, Meltzer
replies, "Everything is on the table."
One
of Meltzer's more controversial ideas is to give a property tax
break of "ten-to-fifteen percent" to city employees, as
an incentive for them to live in Austin. "While they live in
the city they would be going to the grocery stores
churches
schools
(and) restaurants." Asked why other property taxpayers should
carry the burden of paying higher taxes to make up the revenue lost
through this benefit for city employees, Meltzer says the loss would
be offset by the higher sales taxes the employees would pay shopping
in Austin. "I think we'll get more than the money back,"
he says.
On
the topic of traffic congestion, Meltzer says the city needs to
better coordinate road and lane closures necessitated by construction
projects, such as sewer repairs and cable installation, and to better
synchronize traffic lights in areas such as Congress Avenue downtown.
On
the community service front, since 1997 Meltzer has been a member
of the American Red Cross board of directors for the Austin area,
and he currently chairs the committee on disaster fund-raising.
In that role he has responded to fires to assist displaced residents,
using Red Cross funds to pay for such things as clothing, furniture
and deposits. He has housed dozens of disaster victims in his own
apartments, he says.
Meltzer
says he opposed the light-rail initiative that voters narrowly rejected
in 2000 and would need to hear "convincing arguments"
to support it in the future. He says he would like to explore the
possibility of monorail, such as the project being built in Las
Vegas. (That project is scheduled to start carrying passengers over
a four-mile route adjacent to the Las Vegas strip in 2004; it is
privately funded, with revenue bonds tied to farebox and advertising
revenue, according to www.lvmonorail.com.)
Regarding
air quality, Meltzer says, "I encourage people to use smaller
vehicles and I've taken a leadership role and started using cars
that (give) more miles per gallon." Asked to amplify, Meltzer
adds, "Instead of buying the big Cadillac Escalade, which is
beautiful, I bought a car that has high mileage, a Chrysler Concorde."
(For the record, the Chrysler Concorde is rated at nineteen miles
per gallon city, twenty-seven mpg highway, according to www.autobytel.com.
While not exactly miserly, the Concorde's not quite as thirsty as
the Cadillac Escalade, a sports utility vehicle rated at fourteen
mpg city, eighteen mpg highway. For comparison, Mayor Gus Garcia
purchased a Toyota Prius rated at fifty-two mpg city, forty-five
mpg highway.) Meltzer supports Ozone Action Days and would like
to see heavier promotion of the free bus fares on those days.
Meltzer
was not aware of the Smart Growth incentives that have been given
primarily for downtown development projects. "I have to get
educated," he says.
Regarding
the Austin Music Network, Meltzer says it should be marketed to
make money instead of losing it.
Asked
if he would seek support of environmental groups, Meltzer says,
"I'm looking to seek the support of everybody who has the same
mission I have, which is to make the government run like a successful
business, but I'm not looking to hurt our environment. I want our
environment to be here for our children, our grandchildren and our
great-grandchildren." And as for courting environmentalists?
"I'm going to discuss my issues and discuss their issues and
see if we have common ground for them to support me."
Asked
for his views on women's reproductive healthcare at Brackenridge
Hospital, Meltzer says, "I have no comment about it, because
I really haven't thought about it." In view of the city's budget
crunch, does he foresee any reduction in city funding for women's
reproductive healthcare? "I have to look at every line item
and discuss them with my fellow council people
"I
don't know all the issues," Meltzer adds. "I know what
the major issue is right now and that is budget deficit. We cannot
print money here and we can't magically get it from the state because
they have a huge budget deficit."
Summing
up the key issues that he will campaign on, Meltzer named ensuring
no new taxes, reducing traffic congestion, supporting public safety,
making Austin business-friendly, and providing affordable housing.
For
more on Brad Meltzer, visit www.bradformayor.org
or call his campaign office at 512-495-5165.
Ken
Martin is editor of The Good Life. You may e-mail Ken at editor@goodlifemag.com.
BACK
TO TOP
|